Tuesday, December 11, 2007

for the sake of honesty


why can't we, as a nation, just admit that we torture people?
it would make things so much easier.

no more linguistic acrobatics as pundits and analysts weigh the correctness of 'torture' vs. 'enhanced techniques.'
no more propaganda about revealing secrets to the 'enemy' during a closed door session of the Senate. (is the Senate the 'enemy'?)

it would be such a relief to have our cowboy of a president throw a press conference and say, "Look, y'all. We torture. Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't, but we do it anyway. We strap down these young fellers and do things to them that Michael Vick just got sent to prison for doing. But it's ok, because we're America and we think that's what we need to do. You don't like it? Well, too bad."

if we admitted we tortured people we could finally relieve ourselves of the burden of being Democracy's shining light. we could stand tall knowing we are the type of country that literally hurts other people. it's a dubious distinction but one that could make us either really macho tough or really psycho sick. it's like we're living in The Portrait of Dorian Gray, you know? as a nation, we do these horrible sickening things but the picture of ourselves is just as glowing, youthful and full of beauty as it was when we were sort of innocent of such things. but we're so used to looking at the picture of our youth we've forgotten that our nation's true face is warty, full of pus and ravaged by our ... what? our sin? our immorality? our forgetfulness that we aren't supposed to be like some dirty ignorant totalitarian country with a secret police force putting the screws to people?
and if we admitted that we torture people then we, the people, would have an opportunity to ask ourselves if this is really what we want to be and we, the people, could finally begin to demand some change instead of watching the Torture Word Choice Wars like it was some frickin' tennis match.

abu ghraib almost made us look at our true face but it was too easy to blame that ugliness on some poor trashy enlisted men and women. this could be our next opportunity to come to grips with who we are as a country.
how much you wanna bet we're going to find another excuse to ignore our nature again?

Questions Linger After Hayden Testimony

2 comments:

Molly Malone said...

the first step to recovery is admitting you have a problem. i think we just like being shitfaced.

btw: havent' checked in on your blog for a few weeks, but i hope you're healing well from your operation. i had emergency abdominal surgery last week and have thought of you a time or two as i hold my stitches to laugh.

Delia Christina said...

we must like being lied to. to continue with your recovery analogy, it's like being the partner to an alcoholic, but never really acknowledging the alcoholism and so, enabling it to some extent. because we can't seem to get enough of our government's lies, we're just helping it along.

we're complicit with it.

(and thanks; i go back to work next week so the recovery has gone very well. whatever you do, don't cough! that hurts like the dickens.)